New England hopes for home success against SKC

Foxborough, MA (Sports Network) - In recent years, there has been a sizeable
gap between Sporting Kansas City and the New England Revolution.

Sporting has proven to be a perennial contender while New England has struggled to remain competitive in the hunt for postseason places.

But through three weeks of the 2013 campaign, there hasn't been much between
the two sides.

Kansas City has produced an even record of 1-1-1 through three games, while
New England, which started the season one week later than every other MLS
club, sits on three points with a record of 1-1-0.

The Revs started the season with two consecutive road matches, kicking off
with a 1-0 win over the Chicago Fire before falling to the Philadelphia Union
last week. They will play their first home match of the season on Saturday
when they host Sporting at Gillette Stadium.

"It's really important to do well at home," goalkeeper Matt Reis told the
club's website. "We'd really like to win as many games as we can at home. It
really helps us in the long run because it's harder to play on the road.
Conversely, we want to make it really difficult for teams to come in here and
play."

Lee Nguyen echoed those sentiments, saying that he hopes Gillette becomes one
of the more intimidating venues for opposing teams to visit.

"It's really crucial," Lee Nguyen told the club's website of home form. "If we
can win [at home], it's going to be a lot easier for us to make the playoffs.
It's going to be a lot harder to get points away from home. We want to be a
fortress here."

Kansas City knows a thing or two about intimidating venues. Sporting Park has
become one of the league's greatest atmospheres, but in the club's home opener
last weekend, Sporting only managed a point in a scoreless draw with Chicago.

"I would say that we were very good on both sides of the ball," Peter Vermes
said of the performance. "When we lost it, we won it back very quickly because
of our allocation and our positioning all over the field. I think our
aggressiveness to win it back was very good."

Under Vermes, Sporting has become quite strong in turning possession into
scoring opportunities, but that quality was lacking against the Fire last
week.

"We're used to spraying the ball around and having possession in the other
team's half," said C.J. Sapong. "It's just tough to penetrate sometimes. The
final ball was lacking. We did well to keep it in their half, but sometimes it
was just a bad touch or bad pass. The final execution wasn't there."